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See detailDescription of Fish Mobility and Habitat Use in a Large Regulated Fast Flowing River (the Rhône River, France) Using Fine Scale Acoustic Tracking
Bergé, Julien; Capra, Hervé; Pella, Hervé et al

Conference (2011, September)

Understanding fine scale behavioral responses of fish to changes in abiotic characteristics of streams (in term of flow and water temperature) is an interesting innovative issue to improve river ... [more ▼]

Understanding fine scale behavioral responses of fish to changes in abiotic characteristics of streams (in term of flow and water temperature) is an interesting innovative issue to improve river management of highly disturbed large rivers. Acoustic telemetry system have become an essential technology for such studies involving continuous (per second) and accurate tracking of fish movements. In the Rhône River (France), important hydrology and thermal contrasts are mainly explicated by the succession of dams and nuclear power plant from the Leman Lake (Switzerland). In this context, it is likely that fish are compelled to adapt their behaviour and their habitat selection in this changing environment. In order to test this hypothesis, a fixed acoustic telemetry survey was performed in the Rhône River during summer 2009 in front of the Bugey nuclear power plant which released warmed water within the river. A study site of 1.8 km long and 140 m wide was monitored using 32 hydrophones developed by HTI® (Hydroacoustic Technology Inc.). Sixty two fish mainly belonging to three species barbel (Barbus barbus), chub (Leuciscus cephalus) and wels catfish (Silurus glanis) were marked with acoustic tags (307 KHz; pulse rate ~ 3 sec.) and followed continuously during 89 days. Fish positions were coupled with a 2D hydraulic model to obtain main physical characteristics encountered by fish such as flow velocity, water depth, water temperature and substrate. The accuracy of the telemetry system was checked and a positional error less than 4 m was found in the channel (detection efficiency of 50 %) and less than 8 meters along the banks (detection efficiency of 20 %). Behavioral responses of fish were investigated through the individual mobility and activity during selected phases of flow (increase, decrease and stability) and water temperature changes (imposed by both warm water plumes and the rapid transition of deep cold waters from the Leman Lake discharged within the river). Mobility and activity of fish were particularly studied to determine the amount of movement associated with a change of abiotic conditions. The separate effects of each environmental factors on behavioral responses of fish were studied and interactions between factors were analyzed to highlight potential synergistic or antagonistic effects. Finally, movement rules (i.e. individual movement decisions in a particular surrounding environment) were analyzed to determine the role of perception of the environment by fish (i.e. how the fish feel the changes in physical habitat) in the use of space. [less ▲]

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See detailUse of Fixed and Mobile Acoustic Telemetry Systems to Understand Fish Responses to Habitat Variability in a Large River (Rhône, France)
Capra, Hervé; Pella, Hervé; Ovidio, Michaël ULg et al

Conference (2011, September)

The presentation would summarize the advantages and limitations of both fixed and mobile acoustic telemetry equipment deployed in a fast flowing large river : the Rhône river (France). The objectives were ... [more ▼]

The presentation would summarize the advantages and limitations of both fixed and mobile acoustic telemetry equipment deployed in a fast flowing large river : the Rhône river (France). The objectives were to describe fish behavior in term of fish movements as responses to habitat variability due to the production of peaking electricity and temperature heterogeneity (natural or due to a nuclear power plant release). At a local scale we used a fixed automatic acoustic telemetry system to record continuous movements of n=62 fish during short term (lower than day) habitat variability. The study was conducted in a 2 km long river stretch, from July to September 2009. In a 35 km long study site, we used a mobile acoustic telemetry system to record weekly position of n=108 fish over different seasons and different habitat conditions (low or high flows; low or high temperature...), from March to December 2010. Discharge and abiotic conditions (temperature, depth, velocity or substrate) were known (with an accuracy comparable with fish positioning accuracy) every where at any time (i.e. any discharge) using hydraulic 2D model calibrated and validated for the whole discharge range observed during telemetry studies. Fixed telemetry system (accuracy of few square meters) enabled to define individual habitat use during different short habitat variability configuration (flow increase, flow decrease, temperature increase....). Three main species were represented : two native cyprinids, chub (Leuciscus cephalus) and barbel (Barbus barbus), and an invasive species, wels catfish (Silurus glanis). We analyzed habitat used, habitat preference, fish movement patterns versus habitat variability. Mobile telemetry system (accuracy of few hundred square meters) enabled to evaluate space and time utilisation of fish (mainly the same species than for fixed telemetry study) at a larger scale and during different seasons encompassing the reproduction period, the summer or the winter periods. The different results obtained by both telemetry systems will be presented to illustrate the advantages and limitations of those systems in a large river to address fish displacement in response to discharge and temperature variability. This comparison also emphasized the contribution of a 2D hydrodynamic model to understand fish behaviour. [less ▲]

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